Clever Girl Turned Her Tinder Account Into A Money Pot

1. 20-year-old Maggie Archer from St. Louis is using her Tinder to become a real-life Joanne the Scammer. She’s recently changed her profile bio to “Send me $5, see what happens” mostly as a joke, but found out pretty quickly that there might be a lucrative business in scamming thirsty guys.

2. When she finds a curious enough match who inquires what the $5 will get him, she tells them to “Send it and find out”, and provides her PayPal account.

3. Once the money is sent, she proceeds to unmatch with them. “It’s really a foolproof plan, because I’m not actually promising anything, I just say ‘see what happens. A surprising amount of men take the bait.”

4. Archer admits that around 1 in 5 matches actually send her money, and that she has been given money by more than 20 matches in a little less than a week. The most she has ever received is $10.

5. “Some men get creepy and assume if they offer a lot more, like hundreds, something will actually happen, which of course it doesn’t.”

6. She posted her ‘method’ to her Twitter account, and it has since been Retweeted nearly 8,000 times.

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1. 20-year-old Maggie Archer from St. Louis is using her Tinder to become a real-life Joanne the Scammer. She’s recently changed her profile bio to “Send me $5, see what happens” mostly as a joke, but found out pretty quickly that there might be a lucrative business in scamming thirsty guys.

2. When she finds a curious enough match who inquires what the $5 will get him, she tells them to “Send it and find out”, and provides her PayPal account.

3. Once the money is sent, she proceeds to unmatch with them. “It’s really a foolproof plan, because I’m not actually promising anything, I just say ‘see what happens. A surprising amount of men take the bait.”

4. Archer admits that around 1 in 5 matches actually send her money, and that she has been given money by more than 20 matches in a little less than a week. The most she has ever received is $10.

5. “Some men get creepy and assume if they offer a lot more, like hundreds, something will actually happen, which of course it doesn’t.”

6. She posted her ‘method’ to her Twitter account, and it has since been Retweeted nearly 8,000 times.

20-year-old Maggie Archer from St. Louis is using her Tinder to become a real-life Joanne the Scammer. She’s recently changed her profile bio to “Send me $5, see what happens” mostly as a joke, but found out pretty quickly that there might be a lucrative business in scamming thirsty guys.